Kintore

Kintore Town House

Kintore is a town lying on the south west bank of the River Don
about 12 miles north west of Aberdeen and three miles south
east of Inverurie. Since
1996 it has been by-passed by the A96 trunk road which provides a dual
carriageway connection back to Aberdeen, and according to some
sources it is the fastest growing town in
Aberdeenshire: a
remarkable statistic given the pace with which many of
Aberdeenshire's
settlements are growing.

The heart of today's Kintore, as it has been for not far short of
three centuries, is the Town House. This was completed in 1747, having been
paid for by the John Keith, the 3rd Earl of Kintore, when he was elected
Provost of the town. The most striking features are the clock-tower and the
curved stairs.

The Town House was built in what had previously been the market
place. As well as having a council room, the building also held a schoolroom
and a store for the agricultural produce of tenants who paid their rent in
kind. No spare corner was wasted: when originally built, the space under the
stairs formed the burgh gaol.

Amongst the collection of attractive grey stone buildings that make
up the town centre, a number of others also date back a considerable period.
Goosecroft House, not far from the Town House, was built in 1784, while the
Gothic-styled parish church designed by Archibald Simpson arrived on the scene
in 1819, roughly the same time as the Kintore Arms Hotel opposite. Some of the
cottages in the centre of Kintore are also quite old, including one whose
gable, overlooking the churchyard, carries a mounted penny-farthing cycle,
presumably as decoration.

Kintore has ancient origins. The name probably comes from the
GaelicCeann-an-torr, which translates as "the end of a hill".
If correct, this must signify Tuach Hill, which rises to a modest 267ft just to
the south of the town.

Amongst the early visitors who left their mark here were Roman
legionaries. At nearby Deers' Den are the remains of a Roman fort covering 120
acres and large enough to house 10,000 troops. Recent excavations uncovered no
fewer than 44 bread ovens. The camp has produced evidence of up to 20 separate
buildings and was physically almost as large as modern Kintore itself, while
being displaced a little to the west of it. Almost incidentally, the work done
to unearth the Roman remains at Kintore has shown that large scale settlement
took place here almost continuously from the Bronze age onwards.

It is less clear what was happening in Kintore in the centuries
after the Romans departed. It seems unlikely that the Picts who inhabited much
of Aberdeenshire in the
dark ages ignored the potential of a fertile area which had been so obvious to
so many generations of their ancestors. But this mysterious people did leave
some traces of their time here. The gateway of the churchyard in the centre of
Kintore forms a war memorial. Just inside it is the Kintore Churchyard Stone, a
Pictish symbol stone dating back to the early 600s.

The stone carries carvings on both sides, though the style of the
carving is different on the two faces and it is thought that the work was done
by two different artists and possibly at different times. The side facing the
wall surrounding the churchyard carries a carving of a triple disc crossed by a
bar, which some have interpreted as a cooking pot hanging above a fire viewed
from above. Above it is the detailed carving of a salmon. The reverse side
carries poorer carvings of common Pictish patterns described as "V-rod,
crescent and beast". The V-rod has been interpreted as a broken arrow, and the
"beast" may be a stylised dolphin.

It is typical of the fate of many Pictish stones that this one was
discovered being reused as a grave cover in the churchyard. No-one knows where
it was originally found, though it may have been associated with three further
Pictish stones found elsewhere in Kintore. These have since made their way into
museums. Another faint trace of the Picts, though this time of their passing,
comes from the story that Kintore was granted its charter as a Royal Burgh in
about 840 by Kenneth I
for its assistance in his defeat of the Picts.

In 1805 the Aberdeen Canal from
Aberdeen to Port Elphinstone,
near Inverurie, opened for
business. Although it passed through Kintore it had little impact on the town.
Of more significance was the replacement of the canal by a railway in 1854:
this was a literal replacement, with much of the railway being built along the
line of the filled-in canal. Kintore acquired a station and a branch line was
later built from here to Alford.
The branch line closed in 1950, and Kintore lost its station (though not its
railway line) in 1966. Perhaps not surprisingly, given the scale of recent
development in Kintore and the importance of its links to
Aberdeen, there are plans to
build a new railway station in the town on the site of the old.